The Sun
Paper and kerosene oil are commonly used to start fires because they are flammable materials that ignite easily and create a strong initial flame. Paper provides a quick burst of heat to ignite the wood or coal, while kerosene oil is a liquid fuel that can help sustain the fire until the wood or coal catches fire properly.
Wood is not yet fossilized. Fossilized wood is called "coal".
There are 3 different types of fuel. They are solid fuels, liquid fuels and gaseous fuels. Included in there are gas, propane, coal, wood, diesel, hydrogen and kerosene,
It is difficult to ignite wood or coal using a lit match. The match would burn down and singe your fingers long before the wood or coal would light. Using kindling of dry wood shaving, or thin twigs and dry grass, or paper (with or without kerosene), will ignite with one match and burn long enough to light a fire of wood or coal.
It is difficult to ignite wood or coal using a lit match. The match would burn down and singe your fingers long before the wood or coal would light. Using kindling of dry wood shaving, or thin twigs and dry grass, or paper (with or without kerosene), will ignite with one match and burn long enough to light a fire of wood or coal.
the Victorians used coal sometimes wood
Many, many answers. Fuel types: electric, propane, natural gas, oil , wood , wood pellets, coal, corn & kerosene. Heater types: Gravity warm air, forced warm air, gravity hot water, forced hot water, steam system. Wood, pellet, corn & coal stove. Gas heater, oil heater, kerosene heater. Electric baseboard. .
There are numerous types of fuel, depending on what the fuel is used for. Some of them are: Coal Gasoline Butane Natural Gas Ethanol Wood Oil Alcohol Kerosene Hydrogen Diesel
Fuel is any combustible matter, to include coal, oil, gas or wood. A substance that produces useful energy
Kerosene does not increase the size of wood because it is a non-polar solvent that does not interact strongly with the polar molecules in wood, such as cellulose and lignin. When wood absorbs kerosene, it may swell slightly due to the solvent's presence, but this effect is minimal and temporary, as kerosene does not chemically bond with the wood structure. Additionally, kerosene acts primarily as a fuel rather than a moisture source, which is necessary for significant wood expansion.
fossils i think How about these examples: Coal, kerosene, whale oil, wood, propane, natural gas, butane, fuel oil, bunker C, gasoline, ethanol.......
One example of a solid fuel is coal. Coal was used in many early factories during the beginning of the industrial, but was phased out because it was not a clean burning fuel source.